3.1. Environment and Sudden Population Displacement: Policy Issues for Humanitarian Action and Development Programmes (D. Guha-Sapir, Université Catholique de Louvain and M. Salih, Institute of Social Studies-The Hague)
The paper reviewed the policy issues related to the
environmental impact of sudden mass displacements as well as of massive aid
operations. It recognised that apart from general environmental, inadequate
resources use is becoming increasingly a factor creating tensions and conflicts
between the displaced and the host populations. By not addressing these issues
therefore, the relief community aggravates and contributes to the very process
it is trying to solve. The review was limited by the literature which was scarce
and fragmentary. Displacement creates environmental degradation primarily for
two reasons:
(a) the sudden concentration of large populations
can strain the carrying capacity of the local ecosystem and can exceed its
capacity to absorb waste;
(b) meeting the needs of displaced and concentrated populations
is a complex logistics and technical operation and can encourage action that
actively degrade, denude or otherwise pollute the environment.
The environmental impact of mass displacement can be divided
into two categories:
· impacts on the
immediate human environment (e.g. food shortages, inadequate water supply and
sanitation, etc.);
· impacts on the physical and
natural environment (e.g. soil erosion, loss of biodiversity,
etc.).
The environmental management of population displacements is
severely hindered by the limited availability of proven tools such as rapid
methods for environmental impact assessments and environmental early warning
systems), and how these tools can be integrated in a relief operation in the
most effective manner.
The overall objective of introducing environmental impact
assessment and other methods of inquiry into areas occupied by refugees and
internally displaced peoples is to regulate and hence control the negative
impacts of their interventions on the environment. It is also a measure that
allows a timely response to potential and unforeseen environmental effects with
the aim of regaining the productive and assimilative capacity of the
environment. All these together should lead to the sustainability and hence the
conservation of the human and physical environments. Without elaborating the
issue, we present seven policy perspectives which we hope could be debated, and
again, elaborated by the consultative group. These include
· socio-economic
incentives versus command and control with regard to environmental protection
policies;
· an integrated and
inter-sectoral approach to encourage co-operation rather than competition;
· conservation for the
improvement of the quality of socio-economic conditions as well as environmental
quality;
· institutional and
capacity-building for environmental, risk and social assessment;
· planned and voluntary
dispersion versus concentration in mega-camps;
· development of energy saving
technologies and their inclusion in standard emergency relief packages;
· development of clear policy
guidelines within the confines of multilateral and bi-lateral agencies working
with refugees and displaced people.
Action in the field for containment of environmental damage and
control of potential conflicts between displaced and host populations related to
resource use is hardly possible without clear and specific policy directives at
the donor levels. Emergency relief is largely financed by international and
bilateral agencies and the responsibility of clarifying concepts and priorities,
in this case, rests with them. Only on the basis of such policy directives, can
field agencies develop operational strategies and technical guidelines. Along
with the specific concerns mentioned in this paper, it is critical that such
policy should be mindful of the importance of the socio-economic and cultural
factors, particularly for environmental matters and the importance of including
both host and displaced communities within the policy framework. Such an
approach, in our view, would go along way in ensuring a successful
implementation.
It is clear, however, that incentives are required for agencies
and communities alike in order to enhance their abilities to take care of the
environment. This will require analyses of the interaction between the human and
physical environments, and the development of methodologies to determine the
socio-economic costs of
displacement.